TY - BOOK AU - Gelbin,Cathy S. AU - Gilman,Sander L TI - Cosmopolitanisms and the Jews T2 - Social history, popular culture, and politics in Germany SN - 9780472122967 AV - JZ1308 PY - 2017///] CY - Ann Arbor PB - University of Michigan Press KW - Cosmopolitanism KW - Europe KW - Jews KW - Identity KW - Jews in literature KW - German literature KW - Jewish authors KW - HISTORY KW - General KW - SOCIAL SCIENCE KW - Discrimination & Race Relations KW - Minority Studies KW - Ethnic relations KW - Electronic books N1 - Includes bibliographical references and index; Contents; Preface; 1. How Did We Get Here from There?; Introducing the Problem; The Cosmopolitanist Debates; The Jew in Contemporary Theories of Cosmopolitanism; Nomads, Gypsies, Jews; Jews and the Nation-State; 2. Moving About: Cosmopolitanism from Jews in Coaches to Jews on Trains; The Enlightenment Imagines Cosmopolitan Jews; Writers in Coaches; Jews Writing Their Own Cosmopolitanism; 3. "Everyone Is Welcome": The Contradictions of Cosmopolitanism in the Imperial Worlds of Austro-Hungarian and Wilhelmine Jewry; From Vienna to Berlin and Beyond; Vienna, Zionism, and Cosmopolitanism; Prague: On the Fringes of Empire; Berlin: Another Empire; 4. Jewish Cosmopolitanism and the European Idea, 1918-1933; After the Deluge; Stefan Zweig: The Model European; Joseph Roth's Hotel Patriotism; Lion Feuchtwanger: The Empire Strikes Back; Cosmopolitanism Tottering on the Brink of Catastrophe; 5. "The World Will Be Your Home": Cosmopolitanism under National Socialism and in Exile; The Revolution of 1933; Thomas Mann and Egypt; Joseph in Sigmund Freud's Egypt; Heidegger's Rootless Jew; Zweig's Erasmus in Exile: The Cosmopolitan par Excellence; Roth and Zweig: Idealizing the Austro-Hungarian Empire; Zweig's Brazil: The Farthest Exile; Lion Feuchtwanger's History in Exile, the Josephus Trilogy; 6. Rootless Cosmopolitans: German Jewish Writers and the Stalinist Purges; The Left in World War II and Thereafter; Communism, National Socialism, and the Jews; Writing the Stalinist Purges: Alice Rühle-Gerstel, Arthur Koestler, and Manès Sperber; The Left and the Stalinist Purges after 1945: Rudolf Leonhard, Peter Weiss, and Stefan Heym7. Russian Jews as the Newest Cosmopolitans; Rooted German Cosmopolitans?; In Germany, Gogol Is Not Sholem Aleichem; In America, Nabokov Really Is Not Sholem Aleichem; 8. Walls and Borders: Toward a Conclusion; Notes; Works Cited N2 - Cosmopolitanisms and the Jews adds significantly to contemporary scholarship on cosmopolitanism by making the experience of Jews central to the discussion, as it traces the evolution of Jewish cosmopolitanism over the last two centuries. The book sets out from an exploration of the nature and cultural-political implications of the shifting perceptions of Jewish mobility and fluidity around 1800, when modern cosmopolitanist discourse arose. Through a series of case studies, the authors analyze the historical and discursive junctures that mark the central paradigm shifts in the Jewish self-image UR - https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.2307/j.ctvndv9qv ER -